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Ben Smith rushed for 104 yards, and the winning touchdown, as Coupeville nipped La Conner Saturday in an overtime thriller. (Photo courtesy Deb Smith)

He worked for this. He fought for this. He prayed for this.

When Ben Smith played the final football game of his junior season, a road contest at Interlake back in November 2019, he had no clue the world would go topsy-turvy less than four months later.

As the pandemic overran every part of our lives, high school sports were largely put on the backburner.

For Smith, the possibility of not being allowed to play his senior season has haunted him, and driven him.

He worked out, he trained, he followed every Covid-related news story he could find. Even in the darkest moments, he believed.

Saturday night, Smith and his Coupeville High School gridiron teammates, coaches, families, and fans were rewarded for that faith.

Stepping onto the gridiron to face a rival school for the first time in 17 months, playing “fall sports” in the second week of April, the Wolves rose to the occasion.

Winning a war of attrition between two young, scrappy squads, Coupeville pulled off an electrifying 6-0 win in its Northwest 2B/1B League opener.

In a game which saw big plays on defense and offense (no matter what the score might indicate), the biggest was a one-yard bull run into the end zone by Smith to cap the first high school football overtime game seen in Cow Town in maybe forever.

It’s certainly been at least a few years, as the refs huddled to refresh themselves on OT rules, while at least one fan hollered at another, “Don’t go anywhere! This ain’t soccer!! We don’t go for ties!!!”

Or, maybe that was just playing on a loop in my own head…

Never know.

But then, after 48 minutes of two teams — longtime old-school rivals reunited with Coupeville’s move from 1A to 2B — standing in the middle of the ring and smashing each other to a pulp, the Wolves dropped the hammer.

La Conner got the ball first in overtime, awarded a first-and-10 from the Coupeville 25.

At which point the Braves held on to the ball for all of about three seconds.

The Wolf defense surged, 11 men strong, battering the ball-carrier on the first play, the pigskin popping free and hitting the turf, screaming “Freedom!” like Mel Gibson at the end of Braveheart.

CHS freshman Zane Oldenstadt pulled off a sweet two-for-one special, wrapping up La Conner’s runner, while also reaching in and punching the ball free, with senior Dakota Eck pouncing on the suddenly-free ball.

Freshman Zane Oldenstadt came up big on both sides of the ball. (Photo courtesy Michelle Glass)

The lightning-quick turn of events handed the ball back to Coupeville, and there was no stopping Smith.

Completing a 24-carry, 104-yard performance, he plunged up the middle four straight times, his linemen driving the Braves onto their heels each time.

The first carry garnered four yards, the next two 10 apiece.

Then the final dagger went in, Smith crashing from right to left, punching a hole to the promised land, before sprinting off, his teammates chasing him to celebrate.

“This was the best game I’ve ever played in!!,” he said while bouncing with joy from well-wisher to well-wisher.

For Smith’s head coach, getting a win was big, but just returning to action was even bigger.

“Just being out there, being able to compete, play against another opponent, is huge,” Marcus Carr said. “Our defense was outstanding, and our young guys really stepped up.”

While it was a long time ago, the last Wolf team to play earned the program’s first winning record since 2005, then graduated a strong batch of seniors.

One of those departed guys, Sean Toomey-Stout, is now competing for a roster spot at the University of Washington, and the CHS coaches went and watched him participate in spring practices before their game.

Then they unleashed their newest batch of Wolves, who played with their own fiery abandon.

Alternating junior Cole Hutchinson and freshman Logan Downes at quarterback, Coupeville mixed in some precise passing with a fair amount of smash-mouth running on offense.

On defense, it was big plays and big hits, as the Wolves never allowed La Conner inside its 35-yard line during regulation.

Brian Casey, back in action after an injury cost him most of his sophomore season, made a big splash, roaring in to recover an early fumble.

After scooping up the ball, Casey moved to the sideline, the removal of his helmet revealing the most luxurious mane of golden hair in all the land, bringing an audible gasp of approval from scoreboard operator Joel Norris.

“Dude is rockin’ the killer hair!!”

Wolf sophomore Dominic Coffman may have shorter hair than Casey, but he also came up big on defense, crashing through La Conner’s line for a big-time sack deep in the backfield.

CHS stuffed the Braves on a fourth-and-one — a play upheld by a measurement from Coupeville’s all-star chain gang — with a bevy of players earning roars for other stops.

Miles Davidson, Isaiah Bittner, Josh Upchurch, and Kai Wong joined Smith in smashing runners, while Sage Downes, Tim Ursu, Scott Hilborn, and Daylon Houston chased down foes from behind, denying them crucial first downs.

While Coupeville’s defense was rock-solid, its offense was often inspired, yet came up just short of busting things wide open.

Unlike La Conner, the Wolves made it down inside the 20-yard line twice in regulation, only to have their momentum blunted by an equally-scrappy Braves defense.

The first time, Logan Downes zipped silky-smooth passes into the hands of Eck (20 yards) and older brother Sage Downes (16 yards), setting up a first-and-10 at the La Conner 18.

CHS stalled out there, though, then got unlucky on a big drive midway through the third quarter.

After softening the defense with a steady diet of Smith playing battering ram, the Wolves (almost) pulled off a stunning play.

Hutchinson found Sage Downes on the move down the left side of the field, and then things got weird.

Downes pulled in the pass, took a step or two, got hit, the ball popped free, the La Conner defender stopped his pursuit to try and convince the ref it was an incomplete pass…

Pause for a deep breath.

So then Downes picked up the ball and spun away, looking like he was on his way to a possible touchdown, only to be hit by a different Brave, with the ball getting away once again, only this time it was La Conner who recovered it.

And scene.

While the game remained scoreless throughout regulation, the action was never boring, and both teams played surprisingly smoothly considering the long layoff.

There were few penalties, and even though neither team could crack the end zone until overtime, Coupeville got folks excited right at the end of regulation.

With the ball in his hands and 17 ticks on the clock, Logan Downes scrambled out of the hands of a would-be sacker, picking up five yards on a play seemingly destined to lose 10 just moments before.

The Wolf 9th grader then put up a potentially game-winning bomb from the 38-yard line on the final play before overtime.

It disappeared into a mass of hands, as multiple La Conner defenders harassed a Wolf receiver, falling just short of providing a miracle ending.

Not that it mattered in the end, as Coupeville’s overtime domination was just a heartbeat away, sending the Wolf football faithful back to their cars with an extra skip in their steps.

The pandemic is still with us. Life is not yet back to normal.

But, for three hours Saturday night, Ben Smith and his classmates, those on the field and those in the stands, got to focus on something positive.

Take your wins, in a game or in real life, and hold on to them.

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Sean Toomey-Stout, during his Coupeville days. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Sean Toomey-Stout is pursuing a big-time dream.

Having aced a walk-on tryout at the University of Washington, the Coupeville High School grad has taken the first step towards becoming an NCAA D-I football player.

Toomey-Stout, a 5-foot-9, 193-pound redshirt freshman, is now listed as a defensive back on the Husky roster as spring practices begin.

During his time in Coupeville, he was maybe the hardest-hitting Wolf of all time, earning the nickname “The Torpedo” for his bone-crunching style of play.

Toomey-Stout was a two-way force for CHS, providing most of the team’s offense, and scaring rival teams with his defensive intensity.

“The Torpedo” drops the hammer.

A true four-year letterman, Sean first hit the high school gridiron as a special teams player, as he and older brother Cameron, AKA “Camtastic,” raced each other to be the first to cream the dude trying to return a punt or kickoff.

From there, Sean excelled as a running back and receiver, while laying waste to any foes who dared to come within 70 yards of him while he chased down ball-carriers from one side of the field to the other.

He also received national attention when videos of one of his touchdowns went viral.

In a game against King’s, Toomey-Stout followed the blocking of a wayward deer which stumbled onto the field, taking back a kick 95 yards for a score.

Videos of the play reached everywhere from Sports Illustrated to British television.

Like his twin sister, Maya, AKA “The Gazelle,” Sean was a multi-sport athlete at CHS, making a huge impact as both a basketball and track and field star.

Spring football practices at U-Dub run April 10-30, with the annual Spring Game set for May 1.

The Huskies open the 2021 season at home Sept. 4 against the University of Montana.

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Alex Jimenez is one of four returning seniors for the CHS football team. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It seems like a lifetime.

Jump all the way back to November 1, 2019, and the Coupeville High School football team was on the field at Interlake, wrapping up the first winning season for the Wolf gridiron program since 2005.

Powered by departing seniors such as Sean Toomey-Stout and Dawson Houston, CHS finished 5-4 while playing an independent schedule, collecting wins against Vashon Island, La Conner, Kittitas, Northwest Christian, and Anacortes.

Now, after the pandemic wiped out a year-plus of prep sports, Coupeville returns to the field this Saturday with a home game against La Conner, kicking off an abbreviated four-game schedule.

That marks a 526-day break between CHS football games.

With traditional fall sports playing after spring sports during the 2020-2021 school year, the Wolves will play twice at home, and twice on the road — with no Homecoming game.

The plus is no Wolf lost a football season, and the short run gives CHS coach Marcus Carr and Co. a lead-in to what all hope will be a normal 2021 season come August/September.

For now, Coupeville opens with La Conner, travels to Friday Harbor and La Conner, then closes at home with Concrete — a short, but intense welcome to the Northwest 2B/1B League.

Ben Smith (16) leads the rushing attack.

When action heats up, the Wolves will be led by four returning seniors in Ben Smith (RB, DE), Sage Downes (WR/DB), Alex Jimenez (OL/LB), and Dakota Eck (RB/LB).

“They will play significant roles on both sides of the ball,” Carr said.

Other key returnees include juniors Brian Casey (OL/LB) and Isaiah Bittner (C/DL) and sophomores Scott Hilborn (RB/SS), Tim Ursu (WR/DB), Kai Wong (OL/DL), Daylon Houston (WR/CB/K), Josh Upchurch (OL/DL), and Dominic Coffman (RB/LB).

Junior Isaiah Bittner anchors the Wolf line.

Three freshmen have already begun to make names for themselves at well.

Logan Downes, he will be in competition to start at QB,” Carr said.

Mikey Robinett, he is getting some good reps as a running back right now, and Zane Oldenstadt is a great addition to the offensive and defensive line.”

The youngest of three brothers, Logan Downes follows Sage and the oldest of the trio, Hunter, who held down the starting QB job for three seasons before graduating in 2018.

Meanwhile, Robinett follows in the footsteps of his dad, the late Mike Smart, who earned team MVP honors and All-League recognition while playing at fullback and linebacker during his 2001 senior season.

While this season will clock in at less than 50% of a normal campaign, with no playoffs planned, Carr will use the opportunity to work on player development.

The team is “transitioning to a power spread, so timing and good QB play will be big for us.”

With their school having moved from 1A to 2B, the Wolves primary foes on the gridiron will be fellow 2B schools La Conner and Friday Harbor.

If Chimacum joins the NWL starting with the 2021-2022 school year, as expected, Coupeville will gain a third home-and-away rival during a normal season.

For now, Carr is ready for anything.

“Friday Harbor always fields a tough team,” he said. “La Conner has a new head coach, so they will have a different look. It is hard to tell at this point.”

If nothing else, the Wolf head coach wants his program to be part of a boom period for Coupeville athletics.

“I am just looking forward to all sports filling the trophy case in the gym!,” he said.

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Dakota Eck returns an interception last season. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

One bad test, lots of fall-out.

A positive COVID-19 result for a member of the Friday Harbor High School boys track and field team will derail its scheduled football opener.

That’s because many of the school’s track athletes are also football players, and will have to sit out for two weeks.

That game, set for April 9, was supposed to be a road contest at Coupeville.

The Wolves will instead pick up a game with La Conner to take its place, but will play Saturday, April 10 instead.

Kickoff is 6 PM.

“It was better for the officials (to move to Saturday),” said Coupeville Athletic Director Willie Smith.

The move creates a bit of a conflict for CHS workers, as Coupeville also hosts its home volleyball opener the same day, with JV at 3:30 and varsity at 5:00.

But, it is what it is, in this Age of Coronavirus.

“We don’t have a lot of wiggle room in our short seasons this year,” Smith said.

With opponents flipped out, the hope is Coupeville football will still have a four-game schedule in this pandemic-shortened campaign.

After the opener, the Wolf gridiron squad is off until Friday, April 23, when it travels to Friday Harbor.

A road game at La Conner April 30, and a home contest May 8 versus Concrete comprise the pared-down schedule.

As we transition from spring sports into traditional fall sports, info on how fan seating will be handled for football, volleyball, and soccer will be released later this week, Smith said.

 

UPDATE — 3/30 @ 2:45 PM:

Volleyball start times changed to 11 AM for JV and 12:30 PM for varsity. So no conflict.

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Here comes youth football. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

The Oak Harbor Football and Cheer League is back in business — minus the cheer part for now — bringing together young athletes from across Whidbey Island.

Working the sidelines every weekend is photo bug John Fisken, who delivers the pics seen above and below.

To peruse (and possibly purchase) the fruits of his labor, pop over to:

OHFCL 2020-2021 – John’s Photos

 


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